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"squire" poems
fischers rap on a hot tin roof bristol creek pools over rock and seed english wolfhound (and the barkbuster) stroll pine lane vibrant colors of a cool spring in cob yellow and forest green field mice squander in cotton wind goats and ferret hold seven hour trim raven and **** meddle and forage (on a splendid fiaker goulash!) crickets and frogs hidden in swollen grey logs creepers fill the cut stone walls coy wolf high on a frayed white rope eagles perched at trudy’s bend catamounts laze on a snow base cedar (pared arbutus bent   through a failed ground rock) brush spider spins a timely web brown bears fumble at the spirit jamboree quizzical squirrels crack their nuts as pillow clouds float over telegraph trail 12 point dances on talus and scree hen hawks float in a big hard sun clydesdale and coach trot copper smith road (glancing down on finch and the warbler whistling through colander row) lavender fills the peat soil box mountain cats guard the heavenly gates black eyed ridge is wide and open the country squire hails this fruitful land
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Mar 7, 2017
Mar 7, 2017 at 12:18 AM UTC
Welcome to the Shire
That which I discovered a Beat Squire A Potential who I Trust can be Friend As sincere as the News he respires Giving you Updates which does make us Bend Kaibigan, should you show the Numb Male Which Ingredients we are truly made of He chose you. That alone should just prevail And Rice the Staple makes your Friendship oft I mean this Good Thing. Being at your Best And Youth such Buddy could ever provide Live out this Stage well. Far from what the Least Full-Cupped Elders think they could just Advise. My Part is done. Decisions are your own This Future is yours; Make it well-known.
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Mar 9, 2013
Mar 9, 2013 at 4:19 AM UTC
SONNET TRIBUTE: JAN-CARLO FALCESO
‘To bed! To bed!’ Said Sleepy-head; ‘Tarry awhile,’ said Slow; ‘Put on the pan,’ Said Greedy Nan; ‘We'll sup before we go.’ (from Mother Goose) They sat at the kitchen table as The candle flickered low, And Greedy Nan put on the pan To indulge her sister, Slow, While Sleepy Weepy Annabelle Blotted her book with tears, And thought of her Beau from long ago Who she hadn’t seen for years. ‘Why doesn’t Roger notice me, Why doesn’t Alan Dell? I’m wearing the dress cut low for me And I’ve hitched my skirt as well. I’ve a pretty turn to my ankle, so You’d think it would drive them wild.’ ‘But men are a mystery,’ said Slow, ‘And Alan Dell’s a child.’ While over the pan stood Greedy Nan, Was cracking a turkey’s egg, A lump of yeast and a slice of beast And a single spider’s leg. With a wing of bat and an ounce of fat And a toe of frog for the spell, She needed to turn her sister off From her crush on Alan Dell. For Greedy Nan was the eldest girl And would have to marry first, The other two would wait in the queue Or their fortunes be reversed, The omelette sizzled, and in the pan She added before they saw, A piece of some Devil’s Trumpet plant For the mating game meant war. She sliced the omelette into half And she served them up a piece, ‘Didn’t you want?’ said Annabelle But Slow enjoyed the feast. ‘I’m not that terribly hungry now I’ve cooked it up in the pan, I think I’ll just have a slice of bread,’ Said the scheming Greedy Nan. They finished up and they sat awhile, And they mused about their fate, ‘If Greedy Nan isn’t married soon, For us it will be too late.’ ‘I’ve set my sights on a country squire,’ Said Nan, without a blink, Lured them away from her secret fire To confuse what they might think. ‘The room is woozy, spinning around, I’d better get me to bed,’ Said Annabelle, while Slow with a frown Saw Dwarves dancing in her head. But Greedy Nan was cleaning the pan To clear all signs of the spell, Her back was turned to her sisters, spurned For the sake of Alan Dell. And when he came in the morning Greedy Nan was sat by the door, While Annabelle and her sister Slow Were lying dead on the floor, ‘I didn’t mean it to **** them, Al, It was only a simple spell,’ But as he cuffed and led her away He frowned, did Alan Dell. David Lewis Paget
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Jan 25, 2015
Jan 25, 2015 at 8:01 PM UTC
To Bed! To Bed!
‘To bed! To bed!’ Said Sleepy-head; ‘Tarry awhile,’ said Slow; ‘Put on the pan,’ Said Greedy Nan; ‘We'll sup before we go.’ (from Mother Goose) They sat at the kitchen table as The candle flickered low, And Greedy Nan put on the pan To indulge her sister, Slow, While Sleepy Weepy Annabelle Blotted her book with tears, And thought of her Beau from long ago Who she hadn’t seen for years. ‘Why doesn’t Roger notice me, Why doesn’t Alan Dell? I’m wearing the dress cut low for me And I’ve hitched my skirt as well. I’ve a pretty turn to my ankle, so You’d think it would drive them wild.’ ‘But men are a mystery,’ said Slow, ‘And Alan Dell’s a child.’ While over the pan stood Greedy Nan, Was cracking a turkey’s egg, A lump of yeast and a slice of beast And a single spider’s leg. With a wing of bat and an ounce of fat And a toe of frog for the spell, She needed to turn her sister off From her crush on Alan Dell. For Greedy Nan was the eldest girl And would have to marry first, The other two would wait in the queue Or their fortunes be reversed, The omelette sizzled, and in the pan She added before they saw, A piece of some Devil’s Trumpet plant For the mating game meant war. She sliced the omelette into half And she served them up a piece, ‘Didn’t you want?’ said Annabelle But Slow enjoyed the feast. ‘I’m not that terribly hungry now I’ve cooked it up in the pan, I think I’ll just have a slice of bread,’ Said the scheming Greedy Nan. They finished up and they sat awhile, And they mused about their fate, ‘If Greedy Nan isn’t married soon, For us it will be too late.’ ‘I’ve set my sights on a country squire,’ Said Nan, without a blink, Lured them away from her secret fire To confuse what they might think. ‘The room is woozy, spinning around, I’d better get me to bed,’ Said Annabelle, while Slow with a frown Saw Dwarves dancing in her head. But Greedy Nan was cleaning the pan To clear all signs of the spell, Her back was turned to her sisters, spurned For the sake of Alan Dell. And when he came in the morning Greedy Nan was sat by the door, While Annabelle and her sister Slow Were lying dead on the floor, ‘I didn’t mean it to **** them, Al, It was only a simple spell,’ But as he cuffed and led her away He frowned, did Alan Dell. David Lewis Paget
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72
I remember my old grand dad Always wore his Sunday best We always called him "Poppy" It was always pinned upon his chest For as long as I remember He always had that piece of red Tattered, torn, but sturdy In memory of the dead Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" sat out on the porch With his beat up Meerschaum pipe He kept it tight between his lips I never once saw it alight He'd stare out in the distance Seeing things from back in time He'd listen to the voices He never quite heard mine We lost him back in eighty three When "Poppy" got the wire He was the last of his platoon They had just lost Cpl. Squire Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" went inside himself Never spoke another word He was back with his old friends As free as a free bird Each year he would get dressed up "Poppy" would go out on parade He never, ever left the house The porch was the longest trip he made On the eleventh of November He'd would polish up his boots And at precisely eleven hundred hours He would stand there and salute Two minutes more of silence From a man who didn't speak But his actions, they said volumes They showed that "Poppy" was not weak Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" never left his prison The one he created in his head His world was just the front porch And the life that he once led I remember my old grand dad With his poppy, beat by time It would adorn his chest proudly And I now wear it on mine.
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Oct 20, 2013
Oct 20, 2013 at 4:33 PM UTC
"Poppy"
I remember my old grand dad Always wore his Sunday best We always called him "Poppy" It was always pinned upon his chest For as long as I remember He always had that piece of red Tattered, torn, but sturdy In memory of the dead Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" sat out on the porch With his beat up Meerschaum pipe He kept it tight between his lips I never once saw it alight He'd stare out in the distance Seeing things from back in time He'd listen to the voices He never quite heard mine We lost him back in eighty three When "Poppy" got the wire He was the last of his platoon They had just lost Cpl. Squire Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" went inside himself Never spoke another word He was back with his old friends As free as a free bird Each year he would get dressed up "Poppy" would go out on parade He never, ever left the house The porch was the longest trip he made On the eleventh of November He'd would polish up his boots And at precisely eleven hundred hours He would stand there and salute Two minutes more of silence From a man who didn't speak But his actions, they said volumes They showed that "Poppy" was not weak Echoes in his mind of years Images so real I never asked him what he saw His tears...they sealed the deal A silver screen of vintage flicks In his brain of days gone by Of good times with the friends he had Of the days he saw them die "Poppy" never left his prison The one he created in his head His world was just the front porch And the life that he once led I remember my old grand dad With his poppy, beat by time It would adorn his chest proudly And I now wear it on mine.
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68
The white paper snail Followed the *** trail To a small gold boat Where sailors hang their coats The two eyed pirate king Went Sunday fishing To buy his pretty daughter A pearl diving otter The pet store vendor Had putrid body odor To solve his dilemma He ingested a chimera The knight and his squire Went to sing and play lyre At the cave with a bear Who had no head hair Another crazy poem From an old seaside home The brown eyed bard Sends you a greeting card
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May 7, 2014
May 7, 2014 at 11:41 PM UTC
Freeflow Wordplay # 1 (The Seaside Town)
Verily, Twin Hearts in Friendship conceived Is the Right Way to have Interpreted When Shows like these make Public and Perceived To give a Selfless Like un-expected These Humans like me have a lot to Learn To Grow what such Loyalty requires Arthur in his Regality gave Concern For Guinevere to foot what she desires That is how a Follower must behave When the Squire works best under the Light Though empty in notice still carries to stave For his High Lord to shine with all his Might. You are that Peaceful; Such I discover The Heretic in me I must recover.
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Mar 11, 2013
Mar 11, 2013 at 2:01 AM UTC
SONNET TRIBUTE SUNDRY - THIRTY-TWO - TOM DALEY
Flamingos aren't naturally pink But not for the reason most think They preen and they dye And they leave it to dry Before rinsing it off in the sink The magpies send me into fits The ducks have me losing my wits The crows are a blight And they crow all night But I do enjoy watching the **** Vanessa McRafferty-Fryer Set alight to the **** of her squire She took a few shots Of his privatest spots And then laughed as he ****** out the fire A penguin called Panama Pete Had no love of the snow on his feet So he stayed for a spell At the polar hotel With a pool and Jacuzzi en suite I met a quite curious swan By a lake I was boating upon It tickled my *** And insulted my mum With a flurry of wings, it was gone I know of a Gerald McFitz Who arouses himself when he sits For his favorite chair Is the shape of a pair Of voluptuous wobbly **** and one for that special someone... Your pancreas really is grand Tis a thoroughly marvelous gland You've a cute little spleen Though it's seldom seen And a nose growing out of your hand **
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Jun 23, 2013
Jun 23, 2013 at 12:31 PM UTC
Limericks Naughty & Nice
This is the very first of my "Barry Hodges' Memories" poems. People think that Amsterdam is an exciting city, Full of life, full of fun, full of cheap beer and drugs And easy to buy thrilling ******** **** films galore. But there is another side to this Dutch metropolis Believe me, I know, I have been there, squire, And I have seen it in all its drug-filled horror. I was there one balmy eve, just off the Leidseplein, With my older brother, a kind and gentle man (although physically not very pretty), When a gang of Surinamese youths, Sky-high on crack ******* or whatever filth, Attacked us, mugged us, use what words you wish, It doesn't matter, the result was the same. And they left him lying there in the gutter, His skull cracked and seriously brain-damaged, And for what, I hear a myriad voices query, Well only a few hundred lousy over-valued Euros. He dragged out a miserable half-alive existence, For a few Hellish months in the city hospital; Dear God, I shall not be going to Amsterdam again (with or without a Dutch cap, may I add tentatively).
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Aug 19, 2015
Aug 19, 2015 at 1:38 PM UTC
Memories of Amsterdam
I'm twenty seven years old Not, old by any standard But, in my world...I'm seven Seven years removed from an IED Seven years away from the day that changed me Seven years into my new life We were on a routine mission If you can call anything in Khandahar routine Convoy escort, some press folks A country singer and his band And us....always us We were Military Police Bringing 'em in, taking 'em home there we were, Same trip, same road same barren landscape same potholes same, same, same Until November 4th, 2005 Nothing has been the same since then I'm a Sargeant, Military Police William Blankenship Fort Hood, Texas...just a kid...until We were on Operation Squire routine....all routine The first humvee hit an IED flipped right in front of us the bus of civilians, stopped radio chatter like mad Rocket fire took out the Stryker LAV Blew it to bits No survivors We were pinned down We didn't return fire Couldn't....didn't know where to And had to get the civilians to safety We were only 2 miles from base LAVs were on the road immediately I don't remember much about it Just, that it was routine Started with the headaches took about a month Then, the nightmares Sent me back home to get over it To a Veterans Hospital in Texas Still saw the humvee flip Heard the screams Saw the fire, and watched the explosion behind And I wasn't sleeping anymore Couldn't handle bright lights for a time Still can't, but not as bad Doctors said it was PTSD I said, "you think?" What else could it be Two years they kept me in there Two years I saw them die Then...they hooked me up with a service dog New program they said He'd keep me relaxed I couldn't take care of myself And now, they want me to have a dog I said, I'd try it...but no guarantees Said his name was Squire funny....I knew that name from somewhere But, couldn't remember where Big, oafish, Newf he was Like a small fridge with hair And big, brown eyes Squire.... First day he just sat and looked at me Waited until I started to move And he moved with me Came over, and pushed his head under my hand It's been that way ever since I move, he moves I eat, he eats three times as much We bonded pretty quick I still get the dreams, but, Squire knows and he's there Under my hand, calming me down That's all he does, calms me down He doesn't take away the dreams But, he helps I don't know how But, he helps They still die, and I still scream But, not as often Just routine....
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Nov 7, 2012
Nov 7, 2012 at 4:29 PM UTC
Squire - a recollection of war
I'm twenty seven years old Not, old by any standard But, in my world...I'm seven Seven years removed from an IED Seven years away from the day that changed me Seven years into my new life We were on a routine mission If you can call anything in Khandahar routine Convoy escort, some press folks A country singer and his band And us....always us We were Military Police Bringing 'em in, taking 'em home there we were, Same trip, same road same barren landscape same potholes same, same, same Until November 4th, 2005 Nothing has been the same since then I'm a Sargeant, Military Police William Blankenship Fort Hood, Texas...just a kid...until We were on Operation Squire routine....all routine The first humvee hit an IED flipped right in front of us the bus of civilians, stopped radio chatter like mad Rocket fire took out the Stryker LAV Blew it to bits No survivors We were pinned down We didn't return fire Couldn't....didn't know where to And had to get the civilians to safety We were only 2 miles from base LAVs were on the road immediately I don't remember much about it Just, that it was routine Started with the headaches took about a month Then, the nightmares Sent me back home to get over it To a Veterans Hospital in Texas Still saw the humvee flip Heard the screams Saw the fire, and watched the explosion behind And I wasn't sleeping anymore Couldn't handle bright lights for a time Still can't, but not as bad Doctors said it was PTSD I said, "you think?" What else could it be Two years they kept me in there Two years I saw them die Then...they hooked me up with a service dog New program they said He'd keep me relaxed I couldn't take care of myself And now, they want me to have a dog I said, I'd try it...but no guarantees Said his name was Squire funny....I knew that name from somewhere But, couldn't remember where Big, oafish, Newf he was Like a small fridge with hair And big, brown eyes Squire.... First day he just sat and looked at me Waited until I started to move And he moved with me Came over, and pushed his head under my hand It's been that way ever since I move, he moves I eat, he eats three times as much We bonded pretty quick I still get the dreams, but, Squire knows and he's there Under my hand, calming me down That's all he does, calms me down He doesn't take away the dreams But, he helps I don't know how But, he helps They still die, and I still scream But, not as often Just routine....
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89
Blue roads, orange sky, Gray weather, No one to say goodbye. Yellow bricks, Against an orange wall, Cold sky, Against a blue hall. Bitsy black boy, Walking alongside me. Break the chains, Let his squire be free.
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Jan 11, 2015
Jan 11, 2015 at 1:28 PM UTC
Color Me Free.
The earth was sown with early flowers, The heavens were blue and bright-- I met a youthful cavalier As lovely as the light. I knew him not--but in my heart His graceful image lies, And well I marked his open brow, His sweet and tender eyes, His ruddy lips that ever smiled, His glittering teeth betwixt, And flowing robe embroidered o'er, With leaves and blossoms mixed. He wore a chaplet of the rose; His palfrey, white and sleek, Was marked with many an ebon spot, And many a purple streak; Of jasper was his saddle-bow, His housings sapphire stone, And brightly in his stirrup glanced The purple calcedon. Fast rode the gallant cavalier, As youthful horsemen ride; "Peyre Vidal! know that I am Love," The blooming stranger cried; "And this is Mercy by my side, A dame of high degree; This maid is Chastity," he said, "This squire is Loyalty."
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Love In The Age Of Chivalry (From Peyre Vidal, The Troubadour)
Once upon a dainty hill sat old castle of a young king not busied by ***** thrills but in the realm, fair Muse did sing sorry as such to trouble you sire but farmer, lady and great squire are, unto you, to enquire how it is the sun makes such fire to this the young king furrowed his brow and scratched his chin and pondered how eight days did pass and woe betide the pressing question found no bride the elders of the castle old let fairy tales of disorder unfold a great dragon they say lit the sun after finding itself lost and on the run from a shadow giant of world unseen but the tales of course were all but dreams. A little voice filled the air with light and weightless soulful flair a blacksmith's girl of simple dress excuse me sir i must confess this minor stir has caused me stress the young king bade her speak and with that, the child weak stood atop a wonky box with certain eyes and wavy locks dear people i now must say that it is on this cold and fateful day my mind has led to such dismay as I have learned to trust none of you.
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Mar 26, 2013
Mar 26, 2013 at 7:28 PM UTC
King of the Hill
No hope brought nor thought! Not from the dope or the pope! Or the imaginary rope, tightly around my throat. As I boast, as I note and quote! These bright, white halls and walls surround me in dumbfound! Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy... A squire in dire! A squire in fire and need! Shadow’s greed, conspiring too feed in desire, on my admire, inspire, perspire and wires. Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy... Hey, they say I’m insane in the brain! Despite the real pain of the sprains and strain! Despite these wires I feel in my veins. In spite of the constant, existent, insistent and persistent rain. Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy... Forgotten directions, recollections and revelations. Insecure affections and seducing reflections. Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy... Once more adhering, enduring, fearing the nearing, the infection, the rejection and injections! The ongoing detention and retention! Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy... At times I dread in my head! Those crimes and prime rhymes that sing of dreams, gleams, themes and things are not as they seem! Stare crazy, frenzy, hazy and lazy…
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Mar 29, 2012
Mar 29, 2012 at 10:03 PM UTC
POEM ENTITLED: “STARE CRAZY”
He put a flint to the lantern once They’d walked across the crest, Were lost in a group of headstones that Lay hidden from the rest, And down in a slight depression he Lit up a certain tomb, Where the name of Elspeth Trelawney Was reflected in the gloom. Trelawney held up the lantern high While Corby held the ***** And Gordon Bracks with an old pick-axe Stood back, he was afraid. ‘I fear the spirits are out tonight In this graveyard of the ****** ‘Get on, and turn up the sod,’ he said, Trelawney forced his hand. The Squire was quiet and ashen-faced As the two had bent their backs, Corby tipping the earth aside Then standing aside for Bracks, ‘The earth is solid, it’s packed right down, We need to pick it loose,’ ‘Just do whatever you have to do, There’s little time to lose!’ The Squire had buried his Elspeth back In eighteen twenty-four, For seven years he had held his grief But he couldn’t take much more, ‘I have to see her again,’ he said, To kiss her pale, dead lips, To stroke the hair on my darling’s head And caress her fingertips.’ She’d taken the coach and four one day Way out in the countryside, The coachman, used to a horse and dray, Had begun to speed the ride, He whipped the horses and lost the reins As the coach began to slide, Tipped the coach in the watercourse Where Elspeth drowned and died. He hadn’t looked at his lover’s face Before she was interred, But tried to avoid the loss of grace In her face that was inferred. ‘I only want to remember her As she was in the flush of life, Not in the throes of death,’ he’d said When talking about his wife. They’d rushed to hurry the burial, On the day that she was found, Popped her into a coffin, then, Planted her in the ground, Trelawney later had agonised That he hadn’t let her lie, ‘I couldn’t bear her to be around,’ He said, with a tearful eye. But now he wanted to see her face, They lifted the coffin lid, While Gordon Bracks had turned his back To see what Trelawney did, The horror showed on the Squire’s face As he gazed into her eyes, For Elspeth lay in a bleak dismay As her fate was realized. Her hands were raised and they looked like claws They’d scratched at the coffin lid, The clumps of hair she had torn right out Was the final thing she did, And on the lid she had scratched his name In the torment of the ****** ‘Trelawney, may you be cursed by God!’ She’d scratched, with her dying hand. David Lewis Paget
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Jan 14, 2014
Jan 14, 2014 at 7:41 PM UTC
The Final Message
He put a flint to the lantern once They’d walked across the crest, Were lost in a group of headstones that Lay hidden from the rest, And down in a slight depression he Lit up a certain tomb, Where the name of Elspeth Trelawney Was reflected in the gloom. Trelawney held up the lantern high While Corby held the ***** And Gordon Bracks with an old pick-axe Stood back, he was afraid. ‘I fear the spirits are out tonight In this graveyard of the ****** ‘Get on, and turn up the sod,’ he said, Trelawney forced his hand. The Squire was quiet and ashen-faced As the two had bent their backs, Corby tipping the earth aside Then standing aside for Bracks, ‘The earth is solid, it’s packed right down, We need to pick it loose,’ ‘Just do whatever you have to do, There’s little time to lose!’ The Squire had buried his Elspeth back In eighteen twenty-four, For seven years he had held his grief But he couldn’t take much more, ‘I have to see her again,’ he said, To kiss her pale, dead lips, To stroke the hair on my darling’s head And caress her fingertips.’ She’d taken the coach and four one day Way out in the countryside, The coachman, used to a horse and dray, Had begun to speed the ride, He whipped the horses and lost the reins As the coach began to slide, Tipped the coach in the watercourse Where Elspeth drowned and died. He hadn’t looked at his lover’s face Before she was interred, But tried to avoid the loss of grace In her face that was inferred. ‘I only want to remember her As she was in the flush of life, Not in the throes of death,’ he’d said When talking about his wife. They’d rushed to hurry the burial, On the day that she was found, Popped her into a coffin, then, Planted her in the ground, Trelawney later had agonised That he hadn’t let her lie, ‘I couldn’t bear her to be around,’ He said, with a tearful eye. But now he wanted to see her face, They lifted the coffin lid, While Gordon Bracks had turned his back To see what Trelawney did, The horror showed on the Squire’s face As he gazed into her eyes, For Elspeth lay in a bleak dismay As her fate was realized. Her hands were raised and they looked like claws They’d scratched at the coffin lid, The clumps of hair she had torn right out Was the final thing she did, And on the lid she had scratched his name In the torment of the ****** ‘Trelawney, may you be cursed by God!’ She’d scratched, with her dying hand. David Lewis Paget
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73
Get some space from this place, too many ways to say the king is vain, But I make it plain, bleeding grace from my veins to displace the rain Of fire brought by the squire's higher order who order the pain, God **** what a shame, this whole sham is a game, how lame can you get? Before your insane brain lets go the chain of the meek, you grow weak With the weeks like the way a dam leaks, think honestly when you speak, And the sleek throne will honor your reigns' peak, don't freak just streak the roads With humble abodes for your crumbling kin, stumbling within their Fears as you raise cheers to a dynasty all your own, but let it Be known Kings die nasty like Caesar and lastly we can either Rule our own minds or drool away time by letting life fall in line...
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Aug 17, 2014
Aug 17, 2014 at 7:00 PM UTC
The opening verse to a rap song titled "King Me"
Oh see how thick the goldcup flowers Are lying in field and lane, With dandelions to tell the hours That never are told again. Oh may I squire you round the meads And pick you posies gay? --'Twill do no harm to take my arm. "You may, young man, you may." Ah, spring was sent for lass and lad, 'Tis now the blood runs gold, And man and maid had best be glad Before the world is old. What flowers to-day may flower to-morrow, But never as good as new. --Suppose I wound my arm right round-- "'Tis true, young man, 'tis true." Some lads there are, 'tis shame to say, That only court to thieve, And once they bear the bloom away 'Tis little enough they leave. Then keep your heart for men like me And safe from trustless chaps. My love is true and all for you. "Perhaps, young man, perhaps." Oh, look in my eyes then, can you doubt? --Why, 'tis a mile from town. How green the grass is all about! We might as well sit down. --Ah, life, what it is but a flower? Why must true lovers sigh? Be kind, have pity, my own, my pretty,-- "Good-bye, young man, good-bye."
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1.9k
Oh See How Thick The Goldcup Flowers
As your hand travels frivolously To rest on my leg My quiet heart races Then faints Awakened, I'm dizzy And I look around I'm not where I was This is different ground In this dreamworld I wander You take my hand And lead me onward There are teacups of chocolate And rainbows of cream Pathways of gum drops In this delicious dream I weep happy tears As you lay here with me On this sunken silk Made of soft candy Like sunken ships Our feelings plummet Into the sweet sea They had just met They descend into peace Tranquility and ease With every breath lost They gave a tight squeeze From one hand to the other Between cold lips Sweet nothings were murmured And their tale was told Waves turned to flame Covered in fire The cold left quick Flames the new squire The minty swirls Overlapped and smothered The orange licks of flame In the dimming light Our bodies dissolved On lustful tongues Our cries were not heard From our disappearing lungs
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Mar 31, 2013
Mar 31, 2013 at 5:19 PM UTC
Candyland
#Have you ever been madly in love? The old man broke my reverie. On the long faded green bench white with bird droppings he was peering at me through his silver grey beard looking oddly out of place in that college squire park where only the dreamers at the prime of youth would sit between classes to exchange love notes and steal a kiss when the passion couldn't be reined in. Have you ever been madly in love? he repeated, and then as if growing impatient by my silence mumbled, pausing between words, like they stung him like thorns *it extracts a price been paying all my life living with a void no other woman could fill a commitment that breeds only pain yet makes me insanely boastful of being madly in love.* It was recess hour and the benches were being filled up. How many, I wondered, would still hold hands when the classes are over.
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Nov 7, 2016
Nov 7, 2016 at 9:58 AM UTC
Madly in Love
After the painting by Fritz Von Uhde (1848 – 1911)   Sophie is twelve Hanna thirteen dear pinafored girls both home from school this summer afternoon they sit knee to knee but far enough away from mothers’ chatter at tea on the terrace.   The girls have gossip of their own to share and talk is ten to the dozen (and more) whilst Hanna turns the pages of a story book (with pictures): a woodcutter’s daughter a handsome young squire ensnared with love by a magiced white owl there’s a castle by a lake an endless forest  dark a mountainous domain so far away so long ago.   Poised in the doorway of their teenaged years our girls imagine the courteous attentions of uniformed cadets who one day soon may very well sit at the garden table in the dappled shade and silently gaze with longing on their oh so delicate charms.
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Feb 1, 2013
Feb 1, 2013 at 1:15 AM UTC
Zwei Mädchen im Garten
In the warmth of a summer sunset I sat idle on the sea shore Looking at the grey enormity That heaved and swelled in turn As I looked on, the breakers rose high Thundering sea waves dashed And crashed over the boulders Before me was the wild brutality of the sea! Though at times she is calm and windless, A smoldering volcano lies beneath her surface I sat away from the crowd In a cool squire of quiet Inhaling the briny air And enjoying the foam and spray My mind then was light as that of a child That plays on the sea shore, making sand castles I watched small boats carrying men They were heading towards the Casino Moored in the inlet of the sea I felt those men were like flies lured by the flame They come either to perish or to prosper Most of them go back with empty wallets Very few fortunate to splurge in money newly amassed My eyes stretched far into the horizon Bound by a vault of azure sky Swallows were circling beneath tangled clouds The tall masts of ships could be seen at a distance I watched waves taking the shape of curving scrolls Dolphins were seen leaping over the waters And ever growing ripples drifted and strayed As the fabric of blue got continuously shredded For fun I scribbled my name on the sands But a wave came crashing against the shore And the very next moment washed it away Was it here or there, I had scrawled my signature I don’t know. It has vanished leaving no trace Suddenly from a child, I grew into a sage How transient is man’s life on Earth How very tiny we are Set against the vastness of the sea In the wide expanse of life, as on a sea shore We scribble our names to stay But Alas! Some unknown hands wipe them away It dawned on me that with time’s ceaseless flow The world will continue to speed away Without you or me Leaving no memorials behind!
0
Apr 30, 2016
Apr 30, 2016 at 11:41 PM UTC
On the Seashore
In the warmth of a summer sunset I sat idle on the sea shore Looking at the grey enormity That heaved and swelled in turn As I looked on, the breakers rose high Thundering sea waves dashed And crashed over the boulders Before me was the wild brutality of the sea! Though at times she is calm and windless, A smoldering volcano lies beneath her surface I sat away from the crowd In a cool squire of quiet Inhaling the briny air And enjoying the foam and spray My mind then was light as that of a child That plays on the sea shore, making sand castles I watched small boats carrying men They were heading towards the Casino Moored in the inlet of the sea I felt those men were like flies lured by the flame They come either to perish or to prosper Most of them go back with empty wallets Very few fortunate to splurge in money newly amassed My eyes stretched far into the horizon Bound by a vault of azure sky Swallows were circling beneath tangled clouds The tall masts of ships could be seen at a distance I watched waves taking the shape of curving scrolls Dolphins were seen leaping over the waters And ever growing ripples drifted and strayed As the fabric of blue got continuously shredded For fun I scribbled my name on the sands But a wave came crashing against the shore And the very next moment washed it away Was it here or there, I had scrawled my signature I don’t know. It has vanished leaving no trace Suddenly from a child, I grew into a sage How transient is man’s life on Earth How very tiny we are Set against the vastness of the sea In the wide expanse of life, as on a sea shore We scribble our names to stay But Alas! Some unknown hands wipe them away It dawned on me that with time’s ceaseless flow The world will continue to speed away Without you or me Leaving no memorials behind!
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48
"Democracy is the lesser of all evils." Says the Liberal. The Libertarian. The Corinthian. The Macedonian. The Farrier. The Squire. The Stoic. The Astronomer. The Ornithologist. The Eschatologist. The Augur. The Retiarius. The Hoplite. The Centurion. The Governor. The General. The Senator. The Orator. The Assassin. The Emperor. The Ferryman.
0
Nov 25, 2018
Nov 25, 2018 at 8:54 PM UTC
At The Feet Of The Head
The banker sits for his lunch. He sits with his superiors. They ask, “how do you?” He replies, “Good, and you sir?” After pleasantries comes food. Everyone ordered a salad. Food is picked at with dashes of chatter. After food comes business. Business among superiors. The banker sits quietly using his wasted acting talents on feigning interest. He twiddles thumbs, smacks gums, and adjusts weight from one flank to the other. The bored banker nods conformatively. When addressed, his name varies from Tim to Tom to Jack. They were close it was Al. He fills in facts and numbers the optimates don’t care to recall themselves. It’s the only use he has at lunch. Those superior to the banker could have brought his report he made up for this occasion. But, there is an air of aristocracy when one has a serf accompany his master to a meeting of patricians. Like all courtly meetings, the barons and governors hide slights in compliments, cloak ambition in kindness. Use pens as daggers, dried ink as poison. It’s not the banker’s place to notice such things, it is place to serve those who deserve his servitude. Every time he services his lordships, his tie gets tighter, his skin looser, and his bald spot increase its diameter. The bored and defeated banker rises with the Bourgeoisie, clings to their heels, and gets the door. His lunch is over. His break is done. Back to his desk he retreats. Back to work. His time as a squire is done. Until his masters call upon him again. For lunch.
0
Oct 8, 2014
Oct 8, 2014 at 3:57 PM UTC
Banker Beggar
The banker sits for his lunch. He sits with his superiors. They ask, “how do you?” He replies, “Good, and you sir?” After pleasantries comes food. Everyone ordered a salad. Food is picked at with dashes of chatter. After food comes business. Business among superiors. The banker sits quietly using his wasted acting talents on feigning interest. He twiddles thumbs, smacks gums, and adjusts weight from one flank to the other. The bored banker nods conformatively. When addressed, his name varies from Tim to Tom to Jack. They were close it was Al. He fills in facts and numbers the optimates don’t care to recall themselves. It’s the only use he has at lunch. Those superior to the banker could have brought his report he made up for this occasion. But, there is an air of aristocracy when one has a serf accompany his master to a meeting of patricians. Like all courtly meetings, the barons and governors hide slights in compliments, cloak ambition in kindness. Use pens as daggers, dried ink as poison. It’s not the banker’s place to notice such things, it is place to serve those who deserve his servitude. Every time he services his lordships, his tie gets tighter, his skin looser, and his bald spot increase its diameter. The bored and defeated banker rises with the Bourgeoisie, clings to their heels, and gets the door. His lunch is over. His break is done. Back to his desk he retreats. Back to work. His time as a squire is done. Until his masters call upon him again. For lunch.
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4
there once was a pyromaniac he lit himself on fire he should have panicked but everything was just brighter he lived from day to day yearning to add to the pyre he knew it to be easy with a touch it would spread wildfire but he was no devil he could control his desire so he lived in agony even when his need grew dire he'd never intrude unwelcome almost like a vampire but he was far too kind and reticent to trap a victim whom he would squire he scared them all away with apathy and satire he was too familiar with the anguish his fire would inspire he wanted to protect the beautiful souls from the harm of its ire he let his fire burn him to the ground leaving nothing to quench the inquire he watched as his fire ashed his wings and invisibly divine attire he let it consume him alone, entire there once was a pyromaniac he lit himself on fire he was resolutely resilient he drove himself to the pyre but in his final breath he heard no lyre he was a fool that no one could admire there once was a pyromaniac he lit himself on fire i would have held his hand together nothing could conquer us, not the world, not a fire
0
Dec 8, 2013
Dec 8, 2013 at 2:15 PM UTC
the pyromaniac
Brandon Bless you brother for your Holy Spirit filled poems. Bless you Elsa , for your heart and God is using your poems. Bless you Just Melz, Marion,Nicole,Dark and beautiful  too. Wolf Spirit,DC Raw,Ignatinus, David, Timothy, Joshua.. Joe Kevin, Gary L, Traveler, Mike Hauser, Anto MacRuaridh. Soulsurvivoe, weeping willow,Hilda.Emma, MargotDylan. I want to name each and everyone of you that I follow/ Beth St Claire, Nicole, Elizabeth Squire,Mark Cleavenger. Forgotten Heart, Haley Madison, Eudora, Ann M Johnson.n Vanessa Gatley, Beryl Dov, Mercie B, Paul Butters, Emma. Nateive Son,Dopperganger, Cecil Miller,My cup overrunth. Sweetpea, Frank Ruland, olestory teller, Ridicule, Tivonna. Carolin, Anu, Nicole Dawn. plus so many more inspires me. Please forgive me if you are not on here I love you all. Everyone of you inspires me , I see your courage and your love. May Christ always bless you all abundantly with his blessings. I see the courage in all of you whom have my life here on HP.
0
Jul 26, 2015
Jul 26, 2015 at 11:14 PM UTC
Untitled
I can make it This journey home Rich red earth so grave Solid, wholesome Slippery shes salty to the grit Gripping yet forever moving Forever mine Forever lost Who chooses their path Who can tell the fate they hold Where does it lie, in the palm The open palm That outstretched arm Begging you please feel alive Or a closed heart Like stone Ember ring with light hope Mistletoe giving way to feint woe Giving way that grain So rich so full so graceful she falls Scattered in that changing breeze Falls to flow with another Pass us by youthful squire Run once more The grain with the masses One flicker she turns Then blown forever Forever yours Forever lost Forever more she may have been yours Shaking flicker, silver flutter Forever yours whispers swept up with dust Yours no longer Gone, forever gone, Forever only ever owned by it's own past
0
Oct 22, 2012
Oct 22, 2012 at 5:42 AM UTC
Grain